1 / 58

Gifted Underachievement Room 310 Grace Meyer

Gifted Underachievement Room 310 Grace Meyer. If during the first five or six years of school, a child earns good grades and high praise without having to make much effort, what are all the things he doesn’t learn that most children learn by third grade?. Definition of Underachievement.

glynis
Download Presentation

Gifted Underachievement Room 310 Grace Meyer

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. GiftedUnderachievementRoom 310Grace Meyer

  2. If during the first five or six years of school, a child earns good grades and high praise without having to make much effort, what are all the things he doesn’t learn that most children learn by third grade?

  3. Definition of Underachievement • Severe discrepancy between expected achievement (as measured by standardized achievement test scores or cognitive or intellectual ability assessments) and actual achievement (as measured by class grades and teacher evaluations) • Reis and McCoach (2000)

  4. Speculation ranges from 10% to more than 50% of the gifted population are underachievers. • McCoach and Seigle (2008)

  5. Onset typically occurs in middle school and persists through high school • Thirteen years after high school, the educational and occupational status of high school underachievers paralleled their grades in high school, rather than their abilities. • McCall, Evahn, & Kratzer (1992)

  6. Underachievement Quiz • Dr. Sylvia Rimm • www.sylviarimm.com • Why Bright Kids Get Poor Grades and What You Can Do About It (2008) through Great Potential Press

  7. Characteristics • Use reading, tv, and video games as escapes from doing homework • Have creative ideas but they are rarely brought to closure • Use defenses such as “school is boring” • Disorganized • Low academic self-perceptions • Low self-motivation • Low effort toward academic tasks • Negative attitudes toward school and teachers • Daydream and dawdle

  8. Lose assignments and don’t turn in work • Poor study skills • Some are perfectionistic and don’t finish their work • Some are interested in speed, zipping through their work with little interest in quality • “But, Eugene, it’s not enough to be gifted. We’ve got to do something with our gift.”

  9. Internal Locus of Control • Lack of personal control over their educational success • Don’t believe they can reach goals even it they work harder (lack of self-efficacy), so they avoid challenges • Set goals too high or too low – they guarantee failure

  10. Competition • Many have highly competitive feelings, but they may not be obvious. • They quit if they think they can’t win • Poor winners and poor losers

  11. Rimm’s Laws • Children are more likely to be achievers if their parents join together to give the same clear and positive message about school effort and expectations. • Children can learn appropriate behaviors more easily if they have models to imitate.

  12. 3. Communication about a child between adults (referential speaking) within the child’s hearing dramatically affects children’s behaviors and self-perception.

  13. 4. Overreaction by parents to children’s successes and failures leads them to feel either intense pressure to succeed, or despair and discouragement in dealing with failure.

  14. 5. Children feel more tension when they are worrying about their work than when they are doing that work. 6. Children develop self-confidence through struggle. 7. Deprivation and excess frequently exhibit the same symptoms.

  15. 8. Children develop confidence and an internal sense of control if power is given to them in gradually increasing increments as they show maturity and responsibility.

  16. 9. Children become oppositional if one adult allies with them against a parent or a teacher, making them more powerful than the adult. 10. Adults should avoid confrontations with children unless they are sure they can control the outcomes.

  17. 11. Children will become achievers only if they learn to function in competition. 12. Children will continue to achieve if they usually see the relationship between the learning process and its outcomes. Rimm (2004)

  18. Pressures Gifted Underachievers Internalize • Pressure to be the smartest • Pressure to be different • Pressure to be popular • Pressure to be loyal

  19. How to Reverse Pressure • Refrain from using words like “smartest” and “brilliant” • Emphasize “hard work” and “good thinking” • Instead of reassuring underachievers of their brilliance and creativity, it’s better to admire their hard work ethic.

  20. Relationship Between Effort and Outcomes + Outcomes - + Effort - Rimm (2004)

  21. Quadrant 1 • High Effort, High Outcomes • Feel bright, creative, and approved of by parents and teachers • Motivated to learn • Extrinsic and intrinsic satisfaction • Set realistic high goals, work hard, and persevere “Children will continue to achieve if they usually see the relationship between the learning process and its outcomes.”

  22. Quadrant 2 • High Goals, Low Effort • Set goals too high, may be in competitive environment • Sometimes parents set goals too high • Learning disabled children or those with unusual learning styles fit here • Feel dumb

  23. Quadrant 3 • Low Effort, High Outcomes • Most typical dilemma for gifted • Not sufficiently challenged so being smart means doing things easily • Hit brick wall when faced with real challenge • Remedies: challenging work, accelerated or enriched curriculum, homogeneous grouping, differentiation

  24. Quadrant 4 • Low Effort, Low Outcomes • Advanced stage of underachievement – happens for children in Quadrants 2 or 3 over time • Given up reasonable goal setting • Parents and teachers begin to doubt abilities • Difficult to reverse and may need therapeutic help

  25. Two Main Causes • Environmental causes • Unchallenging classrooms • Peer pressure • Isolation from classmates • Family dynamics

  26. Factors within the individual • Depression and anxiety • Externalizing issues including rebellion and nonconformity • Learning problems • Deficits in self-regulation • Social immaturity Reis and McCoach (2002)

  27. Influences: Family • Inconsistent parenting techniques • In 95% of families, one parent emerged as the disciplinarian and the other acted as a protector. • Parents tend to be overly lenient or overly strict – or may vacillate between the two, • Bestowing adult status on a child at too young of an age may contribute.

  28. Influences: Peers • High-achieving peers have a positive influence on gifted students who begin to underachieve. The reverse is true as well. One study showed that 66% of high ability students named peer pressure as the primary force against getting good grades. • Studies show that friends’ grades are very similar by the end of the year.

  29. What is academic success?

  30. Gets good grades with ease (completes assignments with little effort) Level 1

  31. Earns high grades on assignments that challenge (completes assignments that require effort) Level 2

  32. Learns with satisfaction and joy (student is on the way to becoming a lifelong learner) Level 3

  33. Parent Interventions • Foresight • Praise • Power • United Parenting • Modeling • Developing child’s interest

  34. Eleanor Roosevelt said, “The surest way to make it difficult for children is to make it easy for them.”

  35. Why not take the easy road? • There’s plenty of time to work hard later, right? WRONG! • Challenging, enriching courses in school make a prepared, committed, and interested student in college. • Participating in a challenging learning environment prepares students for the academic curiosity and commitment necessary to succeed in a university setting.

  36. ACT data show that fewer than two in ten eighth graders are on target to be ready for college-level work by the time they graduate from high school. The Forgotten Middle, 2009

  37. Only one in five ACT-tested 2008 high school graduates are prepared for entry-level college courses in English Composition, College Algebra, Social Science, and Biology.

  38. Misconception 1: I have a great GPA; I won’t have any trouble getting into college. • Congratulations! But you’re going to need more than a good GPA to get into and pay for your dream school. You may get into college, but you could have trouble staying there. • Colleges look closely at your transcript, not just your GPA. • If you have not challenged yourself in high school, chances are you won’t know how to study when you go to college!

  39. Colleges want to know… • Did you take the most challenging classes your school offered? • What kind of extracurricular activities are you involved in? • Do you have leadership experience on your team or with your organization? • What does the commitment to your classes and activities say about your success on a college campus?

  40. Academics and Activities: Can you do both? • FFA, 4-H, Basketball, Speech Team, Boys and Girls Club—How can you be involved at your high school or in your community? • A person who has organized a recycling drive for the Science Club is more impressive to a college than someone who showed up to a few meetings. • It is important to find a balance between being involved in your school and community while taking challenging courses.

  41. Misconception 2: If I take a harder class and get a lower grade, there goes my scholarship money. • Harvard Admissions says, “There is no single academic path we expect all students to follow, but the strongest applicants take the most rigorous secondary school curricula available to them.” • Centre College looks primarily at the “quality of the high school coursework.”

More Related